Now you made me curious. Metafluency? If you make some new discoveries, please update us
Not so much new discoveries as new connections.
The English language is very schizophrenic largely because it is so easy to be so. Given people's "sensitivities" and "morals" and now "political correctness" it is getting more so. Unfortunately it is beginning to affect ASL and I don't like the effect. I am told the old sign for "toilet" is rude and the new sign "restroom" should be used instead.
A schizophrenic is incapable of telling someone they care for, "I love you and I'm going to miss you while you are gone." So what they will say is "Iraq is a long ways away." You, the listener, have to become metafluent enough to read through to the answer.
In an earlier post I said, "If you tell someone you are going to sit on the toilet for a few minutes" and everyone understood what was meant. I am perfectly capable of saying exactly what I mean -- But social restrictions that maintain bodily functions are obscene require that I become metafluent enough to come up with a euphemism and others be metafluent enough to understand.
But lets put these in the hands of a master:
"Song sung blue
"Everybody knows one
"Song sung blue
"Every garden grows one"
Melodies Neil Diamond -- And we know what he is talking about.
If you watch the movie "Open Range" listen to Sue, played by Annette Bening as she does what a woman is not supposed to do in that time and place: Declare her love. She does so by never saying it, by using metafluency to the max.
I first started wondering about a way to discuss what Shakespeare did in Hamlet when I was a kid. "To be or not to be, Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune or to take arms against them."
I was told it was euphemism, implied, reading between the lines, and a bunch of other stuff. But the second I knew what "disfluency" meant I KNEW that "metafluency" is the concept I have been lacking all these years.
Nowhere in this poem does he directly tackle the questions that were probably outlawed in his day. He does not directly state suicide or suicidal action -- Nor does he directly question the existence of God or Heaven -- But that and more are all there.
Into the mouth of a madman he placed all the questions every sane person must ask themself at some point -- But society tends to reject all conversation on the subject.
Shakespeare was the master of metafluency.